Compare Two Versions of a Prompt
See exactly what changed between v1 and v2 of a prompt — added, removed, and modified instructions, plus whether the revision reduced or introduced risk.
View Resource →Prompt Builders
Paste two versions of the same prompt and see exactly what changed — added, removed, and modified instructions, structural changes, and whether the revision reduced or introduced risk. Runs entirely in your browser.
Paste the earlier version of the prompt.
Paste the revised version of the same prompt.
See exactly what changed between v1 and v2 of a prompt — added, removed, and modified instructions, plus whether the revision reduced or introduced risk.
View Resource →A worked marketing prompt revision — from adjective soup to offer-driven — with the diff showing exactly which changes carry the improvement.
View Resource →A prompt changelog answers 'why does this line exist?' months later. The diff report is the entry format — dated, itemized, and written for you.
View Resource →Iterate prompts like an engineer: change one thing per revision, diff before adopting, keep the report. v1 → v2 → v3 without losing what worked.
View Resource →A revision can read better and behave worse. How to catch prompt regressions — new ambiguity, lost constraints, dropped control — before the edit goes live.
View Resource →Five checks before a prompt revision replaces the version that works: nothing removed silently, no new ambiguity, control intact, contradictions zero, growth justified.
View Resource →Tightening a research prompt usually means narrowing it — the diff shows whether your revision sharpened the scope or silently changed the question.
View Resource →Support prompts carry policy. A worked revision showing how to evolve one without dropping the boundary that keeps replies inside policy.
View Resource →A lightweight way to track how a prompt changes over time: keep the previous version, diff every revision, and read the risk deltas instead of guessing.
View Resource →When a prompt's output suddenly shifts, the first question is what changed in the prompt. A diff answers it in seconds — additions, removals, and edits, itemized.
View Resource →Paste the earlier version of your prompt into Version A and the revised version into Version B, then click Compare Versions. The diff engine matches instructions between the two versions using deterministic browser-side heuristics — nothing leaves your page — and reports what was added, removed, and modified, which structural elements changed (role, audience, output format, constraints, examples), and whether the revision reduced or introduced risk (ambiguity, repetition, contradictions, output control). It finishes with a net improvement assessment. It never rewrites your prompt and never picks a winner — it shows you exactly what changed.
The Comparator answers "which of these two prompts is better?" — it scores two independent alternatives and picks a winner. Version Diff answers "what changed between v1 and v2 of the same prompt?" — it tracks added, removed, and modified instructions across a revision. Use the Comparator to choose; use Version Diff to review a revision.
Both versions are split into instruction units, then matched with deterministic similarity heuristics in your browser: exact matches are unchanged, close matches are modified, and the rest are added or removed. Structural and risk changes come from signal detection — role, audience, format, length, constraints, vague wording, repetition, and contradiction patterns. No AI model is called and your prompts never leave the page.
New vague wording, new repetition, a new contradiction, reduced output control (dropping format, length, or constraint guidance), or removing context, constraints, success criteria, or the target audience. The assessment banner flags these so you can decide whether the trade-off was intentional.
No. It reports the differences and their risk impact — you decide what to keep. If the revision introduced repetition, the Prompt Cleaner can remove it; if you want to restructure, use the Prompt Formatter.
You can, but the result won't mean much — almost everything will show as added and removed. For two independent prompts the right tool is the Prompt Comparator, which scores them and tells you which is stronger.
The edits rephrase instructions without changing structure or risk: no elements were added or removed, ambiguity and repetition stayed flat, and output control is unchanged. The model will likely behave the same — which is exactly what you want to know before spending runs on testing it.